Country-level and individual-level predictors of men's support for gender equality in 42 countries
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Kosakowska-Berezecka, Natasza; Besta, Tomasz; Bosson, Jennifer K.; Jurek, Paweł; Vandello, Joesph A.; Zapata-Calvente, Antonella Ludmila; + 80 autoresEditorial
Wiley Online Library
Materia
gender inequality ally behaviour hostile sexism collective action culture status threats
Fecha
2020-06Referencia bibliográfica
Kosakowska-Berezecka, N., Besta, T., Bosson, J. K., Jurek, P., Vandello, J. A., Best, D. L., Wlodarczyk, A., Safdar, S., Zawisza, M., Żadkowska, M., Sobiecki, J., Agyemang, C. B., Akbaş, G., Ammirati, S., Anderson, J., Anjum, G., Aruta, J. J. B. R., Ashraf, M., Bakaitytė, A., … Žukauskienė, R. (2020). Country-level and individual-level predictors of men’s support for gender equality in 42 countries. European Journal of Social Psychology, 50(6), Article 6. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2696
Patrocinador
This contribution was supported by the National Science Centre in Poland, grant number:2017/26/M/HS6/00360. Data collection by Angel Gomez, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Spain have been supported by grant number: Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, RTI2018-10093550-B-I00 Data collection by Claudio V. Torres, University of Brasilia have been supported by University of Brasilia grant number: DPI / DIRPE n. 04/2019.Resumen
Men sometimes withdraw support for gender equality movements when their higher gender status is threatened. Here, we expand the focus of this phenomenon by examining it cross-culturally, to test if both individual- and country-level variables predict men's collective action intentions to support gender equality. We tested a model in which men's zero-sum beliefs about gender predict reduced collective action intentions via an increase in hostile sexism. Because country-level gender equality may threaten men's higher gender status, we also examined whether the path from zero-sum beliefs to collective action intentions was stronger in countries higher in gender equality. Multilevel modeling on 6,734 men from 42 countries supported the individual-level mediation model, but found no evidence of moderation by country-level gender equality. Both country-level gender equality and individual-level zero-sum thinking independently predicted reductions in men's willingness to act collectively for gender equality.





